John 20:1

Berean Standard Bible · deep dive

Early on the first day of the week, while it was still dark, Mary Magdalene went to the tomb and saw that the stone had been removed from the entrance.

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What it means

John's resurrection account opens in the dark. Notice that detail — "while it was still dark." John, more than any other Gospel writer, loves the contrast between light and dark, and he plants it here on purpose. The world is still in night. The disciples are still in night. Mary is walking in night. She doesn't know yet that the sun of the world has already risen.

"The first day of the week" — what we'd call Sunday. For a Jewish woman like Mary, the week starts the day after Sabbath. She has waited through Friday's horror and Saturday's silence, and now, at the first legal moment she can move, she moves. She comes to a sealed tomb expecting to grieve, probably to finish the burial rites that the rush of Friday evening cut short (compare John 19:42).

Then the punch: "saw that the stone had been removed." John doesn't say "rolled away" — he uses a word that means lifted off, taken away. The tomb is open. The verb is in a form that suggests a finished action: somebody has already done this, and it's done.

Notice what John does not say here. There's no earthquake (that's Matthew 28:2). There's no angel speaking yet. There's no risen Jesus in view. John gives you Mary, the dark, and an open hole in a rock. That's it. He's letting the strangeness sit.

Where this fits the bigger story: John's Gospel began with "In the beginning" (John 1:1), echoing Genesis. Now, on the first day of a new week, in a garden (John 19:41), with a woman as the first witness, John is quietly telling you: a new creation is starting. Not a continuation. A new beginning.

There's no real Christian disagreement on the basic facts here — Mary came, the stone was gone. The interesting question is why John leads with her, and we'll get to that.

Historical Context

John's Gospel was likely written somewhere around AD 85–95, probably from Ephesus, decades after the events it describes. By the time John writes, the other Gospels have been circulating for years. John assumes you've heard the basic story — he's filling in what the others left out and pressing the meaning deeper.

The world of the events themselves is Jerusalem under Roman occupation, around AD 30–33. The tomb Mary visits belongs to Joseph of Arimathea, a wealthy member of the Sanhedrin (the Jewish ruling council). Wealthy Judeans of the period were buried in rock-cut tombs — a chamber carved into a cliff face, with a low entrance sealed by a large disc-shaped stone that rolled in a groove. We've actually excavated tombs like this around Jerusalem. The stone could weigh several hundred pounds. Moving one was not a one-person job.

Mary Magdalene — "Magdalene" just means from Magdala, a fishing town on the Sea of Galilee. Luke 8:2 tells us Jesus had driven seven demons out of her. She had followed him from Galilee, helped fund the ministry from her own resources, stood at the cross when most of the men had fled (John 19:25), and now she's first to the grave.

This matters more than modern readers feel. In first-century Jewish and Roman courts, a woman's testimony carried little to no legal weight. If you were inventing a resurrection story to convince a skeptical world, you would never make women the first witnesses. The fact that all four Gospels do — that the entire Christian movement is launched on the testimony of women whom no court would believe — is one of the quiet, stubborn arguments for the story being true. The early church didn't tidy this up. They left it because that's how it happened.

Also worth knowing: "the first day of the week" quickly became the day Christians gathered to worship (Acts 20:7; 1 Corinthians 16:2). They were marking this morning — every week.

Original Language

A few words worth lingering on:

- πρωΐ (prōi) — "early." In Roman reckoning of night watches, this was the fourth watch, roughly 3 to 6 a.m. Mary isn't taking a morning stroll. She's out before respectable people are out, before it's safe, before she can really see where she's going. Love makes you do that.

- σκοτίας (skotias) — "darkness." This is a loaded word in John. The Gospel opened with "the light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it" (John 1:5, same root). John is signaling: the world is still in the night of the cross. Mary doesn't know what time it really is.

- ἠρμένον (ērmenon) — "had been removed." It's a perfect participle of αἴρω (airō), which means to lift up, take away, carry off. The perfect tense means: it has been lifted off, and it stays lifted off. This is the same verb John the Baptist uses in John 1:29 — "the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world." The stone has been taken away the way sin has been taken away. Probably not an accident.

- μνημεῖον (mnēmeion) — "tomb," literally a memorial, a place of remembering. The thing meant to remember a dead man is now empty.

Application

Notice where Mary is when the resurrection has already happened: in the dark.

Jesus is alive. The stone is off. The grave is empty. And Mary is still walking in the night, still carrying spices for a corpse, still weeping. The greatest event in human history has already taken place, and the person who loved him most doesn't know it yet.

Sit with that for a second. Because that's probably you, somewhere in your life right now.

There's a place where you've already been forgiven, and you're still beating yourself up. There's a prayer he's already answered, and you're still praying it like he hasn't heard. There's a fear he's already conquered, and you're still organizing your life around it. There's a part of you he has already healed, and you keep returning to the tomb of it, expecting to find death.

Mary's first move when she sees the empty tomb (in the next verses) is to assume the worst: "they have taken away the Lord." Grief jumped to grave-robbing. That's what darkness does. It reads good news as more bad news.

Here's the cost this verse asks of you: stop trusting your reading of the dark. You are not a reliable narrator at 3 a.m. Your fears, your shame, your "this will never change" — those are night-time voices. The sun has already come up over the garden whether you can see it or not.

So go to the tomb anyway. Show up to the place where you expect to find God dead — your hard marriage, the prayer you've stopped praying, the addiction you've stopped fighting, the friend you've given up on. Show up early. Show up in the dark. Show up with your spices. Because the stone has already been taken away. You just haven't seen it yet.

Prayer Points

Reflections

Sources

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